  | 
            | 
         
         
          |  
                
              
 alternatively 
CD: 
MDT
AmazonUK
AmazonUS
 
Sound Samples & Downloads
  
		    | 
           
             
			Peter MAXWELL DAVIES (b.1934)  
  Symphony no.4, op.136 (1989) [42:46]  
              Symphony no.5, op.166 (1994) [26:25]*  
             
            Scottish Chamber Orchestra/Peter Maxwell Davies  
  Philharmonia Orchestra*/Peter Maxwell Davies
 
			rec. City Halls, Glasgow, April 1990; *All Saints' Church, Tooting,
London,
  3 December 1994. DDD 
 
                
              NAXOS 8.572351   [69:12]  
           | 
         
         
          |  
            
           | 
         
         
           
             
               
                 
                   
                  Following the success of Peter Maxwell Davies's ten 'Naxos' 
                  String Quartets (review of boxed set), 2012 sees Naxos reissuing the 
                  first five Symphonies (review of the Third and of the First), with the Sixth already on the way in November. 
                  Of the set as it stands to date, this is the most generous in 
                  terms of symphonic minutes, giving the listener two classic 
                  Symphonies - a double treat from one of Britain's greatest living 
                  composers.  
                     
                  These were originally issued in the early Nineties by the now 
                  vanished Collins Classics label: the Fourth Symphony on 11812 
                  (1995), the Fifth on 14602 (1991). Curiously, given the stature 
                  of Maxwell Davies and the power of the two Symphonies, these 
                  remain the only recordings to date.  
                     
                  The composer had a long and close relationship with the Scottish 
                  Chamber Orchestra, even writing his ten Strathclyde Concertos 
                  for the orchestra's principals. Indeed, he composed the Fourth 
                  Symphony for the SCO, and it was he and they who gave the premiere 
                  at the BBC Proms in 1989, less than a year before this recording 
                  was made. The Fifth was also premiered at the Proms by Maxwell 
                  Davies (in 1994), but this time conducting the Philharmonia 
                  Orchestra, who also commissioned it.  
                     
                  The scaled-down nature of the orchestra in the Fourth is not 
                  always self-evident - Maxwell Davies makes skilful, emphatic 
                  use of resources to create a flambeau of elemental force and 
                  grandeur. Despite certain significant differences, the work 
                  is in some ways a continuation of the Third, as is the Fifth 
                  of the Fourth: both tend to scud along now moodily, now more 
                  in contemplation, towards a more dramatic final section.  
                     
                  At any rate, both Symphonies present the composer in a very 
                  different light to frothier, melodic works by which he is more 
                  universally known, such as Mavis in Las Vegas, An 
                  Orkney Wedding with Sunrise or Farewell to Stromness. 
                  As in much of Maxwell Davies's more substantial works, no one 
                  is going to be bowled over by an abundance of melody or dancy 
                  rhythms, but nor is the composer an unapproachable modernist, 
                  and for muscular vividness and multi-textured eloquence, this 
                  pair is hard to beat. The Fifth in particular, with its greater 
                  cut and thrust - and volume! - is probably the most accessible 
                  entry point into the composer's Symphonies.  
                     
                  Given their intimate knowledge of the respective scores, the 
                  SCO and Philharmonia's accounts of these works under their progenitor 
                  must be considered benchmarks, and there is nothing in these 
                  fairly immaculate recordings to start off any debate. Sound 
                  quality in both cases is good - the best of the bunch so far, 
                  in fact. Richard Whitehouse supplies the notes this time - detailed, 
                  informative, well written ones at that. The inlay gives the 
                  recording venue as 'Glasgow City Hall' - it should be Glasgow 
                  City Halls.  
                     
                  Byzantion  
                  Collected reviews and contact at artmusicreviews.co.uk  
                     
                  See also review by Mark 
                  Sealey  
                Maxwell Davies 
                on Naxos
                 
                   
                 
                 
                   
                   
                 
                
                 
             
           | 
         
       
     
     |